Booknotes 3.16
Nonfiction
- Young Stalin, by Simon Sebag Montefiore, published 2007. Quite good. For me — who didn’t know much about Stalin beyond a vague “leader of Russia during WWII who killed a lot of people” and who also didn’t know much about the October Revolution beyond it taking place in 1917 — this filled in a lot of details. Fascinating (and tragic) to see where single-minded devotion to revolution can take a man. Stalin feels like a real person in my head now, human and all (surprisingly human, really), no longer just a vague supervillain. Also, I had no idea about all the exiles. Or all the many girlfriends. Or the disturbing age gaps with some of them. That part was gross. (Different times? Sure, to some degree. But still.)
Fiction
- Hidden, by Benedict Jacka, published 2014, fantasy. Alex Verus book 5. Liked it. The overarching story continues to be interesting. (I don’t want to spoil anything with these reviews, which makes it hard to say much of anything about books later in a series like this. Apologies.)
- The Unselected Journals of Emma M. Lion, volume 6, by Beth Brower, published 2022, fiction. Good as usual. Delightful and witty and fun. I’m debating whether to hurry up and read volume 7 so I can finally get caught up with my wife (and be ready for volume 8, which hopefully drops sometime this year) or wait a bit first since volume 8 isn’t ready quite yet and I don’t want to run out of Emma M. Lion books yet.
- Come Tumbling Down, by Seanan McGuire, published 2020, fantasy. Wayward Children book 5. Dark and imaginative and somewhat uncomfortable. I don’t know that this one worked quite as well for me, but I still plan to continue reading the series.